NAME
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle - AnyEvent::Handle subclass with user-defined
up/down bandwidth cap
Synopsis
use AnyEvent;
use AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle;
my $condvar = AnyEvent->condvar;
my $handle;
$handle = AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle->new(
upload_limit => 2, # Very...
download_limit => 50, # ...slow
connect => ['google.com', 'http'],
on_error => sub {
warn "error $_[2]\n";
$_[0]->destroy;
$condvar->send;
},
on_eof => sub {
$handle->destroy;
warn "done.\n";
$condvar->send;
}
);
$handle->push_write("GET / HTTP/1.0\015\012\015\012");
$handle->push_read(
line => "\015\012\015\012",
sub {
my ($handle, $line) = @_;
print "HEADER\n$line\n\nBODY\n";
$handle->on_read(sub { print $_[0]->rbuf; $_[0]->rbuf = ''; });
}
);
$condvar->recv;
Description
This class adds a (nearly too) simple throughput limiter to
AnyEvent::Handle.
Methods
In addition to AnyEvent::Handle's base methods, this subclass supports
the following...
$handle = AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle->new( key => value, ... )
In addition to the arguments handled by "AnyEvent::Handle->new( ...
)", this constructor supports these arguments (all as "key => value"
pairs).
upload_limit =>
This is the maximum amount of data (in bytes) written to the
filehandle per period. If "upload_limit" is not specified, the
upload rate is not limited.
Note that this value can/will override "read_size".
download_limit =>
This is the maximum amount of data (in bytes) read from the
filehandle per period. If "download_limit" is not specified, the
upload rate is not limited.
$handle->upload_limit( $bytes )
Sets/returns the current upload rate in bytes per period.
$handle->download_limit( $bytes )
Sets/returns the current download rate in bytes per period.
$bytes = $handle->upload_speed( )
Returns the amount of data written during the previous period.
$bytes = $handle->download_speed( )
Returns the amount of data read during the previous period.
If you're using AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle to limit bandwidth and
realize you'd rather set flat limits on the total bandwidth instead of
per-handle, try these methods:
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle->global_upload_limit( $bytes )
Sets/returns the current global upload rate in bytes per period.
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle->global_download_limit( $bytes )
Sets/returns the current global download rate in bytes per period.
$bytes = $handle->global_upload_speed( )
Returns the amount of data written through all
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle objects during the previous period.
$bytes = $handle->global_download_speed( )
Returns the amount of data read through all
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle objects during the previous period.
$bytes = $handle->download_total( )
Returns the total amount of data read through the
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle object.
$bytes = $handle->upload_total( )
Returns the total amount of data written through the
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle object.
$bytes = $handle->global_download_total( )
Returns the total amount of data read through all
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle objects so far.
$bytes = $handle->global_upload_total( )
Returns the total amount of data sent through all
AnyEvent::Handle::Throttle objects so far.
Notes
* The current default period is 1 second.
* On destruction, all remaining data is sent ASAP, ignoring the user
defined upload limit. This may change in the future.
Bugs
I'm sure this module is just burting with 'em. When you stumble upon
one, please report it via the Issue Tracker
.
Author
Sanko Robinson - http://sankorobinson.com/
CPAN ID: SANKO
License and Legal
Copyright (C) 2010 by Sanko Robinson
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of The Artistic License 2.0
. See the LICENSE
file included with this distribution or notes on the Artistic License
2.0 for
clarification.
When separated from the distribution, all original POD documentation is
covered by the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License
. See the
clarification of the CCA-SA3.0
.
$Id: README bc1ea36 2010-08-25 18:16:33Z sanko@cpan.org $